DUCK AND COVER | Thinking out of the Big Box

RSAUD’s design proposal / business strategy for Target encourages higher and better use of Big Box sites in urban communities. Arguing that big box retailers, with their strong brand identities and large tracts of underused land, “represent the next frontier of public life - cum - market-driven development,” Sherman proposes thickening - literally and figuratively - Target’s logo to provide amenities on an over-scaled, sloping roof. Part billboard, part landscape, the project would be a “Trojan horse for an expanded public realm,” attracting an “unlikely assortment of audiences.”

I was responsible for producing concept diagrams and organizing the final display boards for our presentation of “Duck and Cover” at the 4th International Architecture Biennale in Rotterdam. I also helped digitally model the complex geometries for the 3D prints that supplemented our boards.